India is fast becoming a favoured destination for global animators. Chandigarh-based Compact Disc India Ltd (CDIL) has signed a deal worth a record $20.15 million with Motion Pixel Corporation, a production company from Los Angeles, to co-produce a 3D animation film called Goaaaaal! |
As the name suggests, soccer will be integral to the film, which will tell the story of a young girl who aspires to be a soccer world champion and how, through determination and hard work, she fulfils her dream. |
It will have Ronaldo and such established names from the glamour industry as Ben Kingsley, Michael Douglas, Samuel L Jackson, Christina Aguilera and Catherine Zeta Jones lending their voices to it. Not just that, the script will also feature animated versions of these celebrities. |
CDIL's state-of-the-art studio in Chennai will work on the 90-minute film, which will take about a year to make. Written by renowned Hollywood writer, M Guerrier, Goaaaaal! is expected to release world-wide in 2009, to coincide with the FIFA Confederation Cup. |
Says Suresh Kumar, chairman, CDIL, "This is a significant milestone for the Indian animation industry." The same movie would have cost many times more had it been made in the US, he goes on to add. |
CDIL expects the movie to do good business, given the wide appeal of soccer. The company could also look at merchandising "" in terms of soccer balls, T-shirts, energy drinks "" as a revenue stream for the film. |
Apart from this venture, CDIL is also working on 2D and 3D animation projects worth $40 million, outsourced by major international production houses. |
Among these are Parallel Universe, a six-part television series funded by Malaysian Debt Ventures Bhd, and another animation film, called Hustle Bustle, with Interactive Creative Media Pte. Ltd, Singapore for $12.45 million. |
On the home front, CDIL has completed a full-length feature, Friends Forever (slated for an August 2007 release), in which a 3D animated character, Zampano, interacts with live-action characters. |
"Indian animation," feels Kumar, "is creating an identity for itself today in the global marketplace." Indeed, a recent independent survey says the Indian animation industry, now pegged at $550 million, will grow 30 per cent annually for the next couple of years to reach $15 billion by 2010. |